Grit: The Power of Passion and Perseverance



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Angela Duckworth - GRIT The Power of Passion and Perseverance (2016, Penguin) - libgen.li

believes
that laying down the next brick is just something that has to be done, or instead something
that will lead to further personal success, or, finally, work that connects the individual to something
far greater than the self.
I agree. How you 
see
your work is more important than your job title.
And this means that you can go from job to career to calling—all without changing your
occupation.
“What do you tell people,” I recently asked Amy, “when they ask you for advice?”
“A lot of people assume that what they need to do is 
find
their calling,” she said. “I think a lot of
anxiety comes from the assumption that your calling is like a magical entity that exists in the world,
waiting to be discovered.”
That’s also how people mistakenly think about interests, I pointed out. They don’t realize they need
to play an active role in 
developing and deepening
their interests.
“A calling is not some fully formed thing that you find,” she tells advice seekers. “It’s much more
dynamic. Whatever you do—whether you’re a janitor or the CEO—you can continually look at what
you do and ask how it connects to other people, how it connects to the bigger picture, how it can be
an expression of your deepest values.”
In other words, a bricklayer who one day says, “I am laying bricks” might at some point 
become
the bricklayer who recognizes “I am building the house of God.”
Amy’s observation that the same individual in the same occupation can at different times think of it as
a job, career, or calling brought to mind Joe Leader.
Joe is a senior vice president at NYC Transit. Basically, he’s the New York City subway’s lead
engineer. It’s a task of almost unimaginable proportions. Annually, more than 1.7 billion trips are
taken on the city’s subways, making it the busiest subway system in the United States. There are 469
stations. Laid end to end, the tracks for the subway system would reach all the way to Chicago.
As a young man, Leader wasn’t looking for a calling. He was looking to pay back student loans.
“When I was coming out of college,” he told me, “my biggest concern was just getting a job. Any
job. Transit came to our campus to recruit engineers, and I got hired.”
As an intern, Leader was assigned to work on the tracks. “I threw in rails, I was pulling ties, I was
doing cable work for the third rail.”
Not everyone would find that work interesting, but Joe did. “It was fun. When I was first on the
job, and all my buddies were business or computer guys, we used to go out, and on the way home
from the bars in the evening, they used to run up and down a platform and say, ‘Joe, what’s this,
what’s this?’ I used to tell them: that’s a third-rail insulator, that’s an insulated joint. To me, it was
fun.”
So, interest was the seed of his passion.


Joe soon ended up doing a lot of planning work, which he also enjoyed. As his interests and
expertise deepened, and he started to distinguish himself, he began to see transit engineering as a
long-term career. “On my days off, I went down to the laundromat to do the laundry. You know those
big tables for folding your clothes? Well, all the women used to laugh because I’d bring my
engineering drawings and lay them out and work on them. I really fell in love with that part of the
job.”
Within a year, Joe said he began to look at his work differently. Sometimes, he’d look at a bolt or
rivet and realize that some fellow had put that in decades ago, and here it was, still in the same place,
still making the trains run, still helping people to get where they needed to be.
“I began to feel like I was making a contribution to society,” he told me. “I understood I was
responsible for moving people every single day. And when I became a project manager, I would walk
away from these big installation jobs—you know, a hundred panels or a whole interlocking [of
signals]—and I knew that what we’d done was going to last for thirty years. That was when I felt I
had a vocation, or I would say, a calling.”
To hear Joe Leader talk about his work might make you wonder if, after a year of not finding your
work to be a calling, you should give up hope. Among her MBA students, Amy Wrzesniewski finds
that many give their job only a couple of years before concluding that it couldn’t possibly be their
life’s passion.
It may comfort you to know that it took Michael Baime much longer.
Baime is a professor of internal medicine at the University of Pennsylvania. You might think his
calling is to heal and to teach. That’s only partly right. Michael’s passion is well-being through
mindfulness. It took him years to integrate his personal interest in mindfulness with the other-centered
purpose of helping people lead healthier, happier lives. Only when interest and purpose melded did
he feel like he was doing what he’d been put on this planet to do.
I asked Michael how he got interested in mindfulness, and he took me all the way back to his
boyhood. “I was looking up at the sky,” he told me. “And the strangest thing happened. I felt like I was
actually getting lost in the sky. I felt it as a sort of opening, like I was becoming much larger. It was
the most wonderful experience I’ve ever had.”
Later, Michael found that he could make the same thing happen just by paying attention to his own
thoughts. “I became obsessed,” he told me. “I didn’t know what to call it, but I would do it all the
time.”
Several years later, Michael was browsing in a bookstore with his mother when he came upon a
book that described his experience exactly. The book was by Alan Watts, a British philosopher who
wrote about meditation for Western audiences long before it became fashionable.
With his parents’ encouragement, Michael took classes in meditation throughout high school and
college. As graduation approached, he had to decide what to do next. 

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